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How My Chilean Host Mother Reciprocated to Cruelty With Kindness

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Covid-Related Travel Update, Jan 2024: Chile is open to international tourists. Visit the Chilean government’s official website for travel-related information and regulations. Don’t forget to read the government’s rules to be followed in public spaces here. My guide to Chile visa would be helpful for Indian citizens.

We were in September, and the sun had been hiding away for many days from Chiloé, a southern island of petite Chile. Rain thudded the brick-tiled roof unabashedly. I shivered after a shower on a cold evening in Castro. To avoid getting scolded by my host mother for not drying my hair well, I walked down to warm my head near the kitchen fire.

My host mother, who was already sitting at the round, wooden dining and sipping mate from her cup, called me to join her while patting the thick sofa cushion on her left. Perched on her right, the British volunteer, who was also teaching English to Chilean students with English Open Doors, rolled his eyes as he saw me accepting her invitation and approaching them. Respecting our usual friendly banter and rekindling the Indo-British feud, I threw some bad words in his direction. 

Then as the three of us huddled at the dining and sipped tea in the cozy kitchen of our uninsulated home, my host mother told us that her brother had just come home to request some wine, and then she warned us not to trust him as he was an alcoholic.

Though I had seen her brother visit us every day, eat bread and cheese at the dining, drink wine, of which she kept a big bottle in her kitchen especially for him, I never realized he was an alcoholic. Maybe I was focusing on cracking the heavy Spanish that darted to and fro between the siblings.

But his alcoholism was not the devastating part of the story. 

My host mother then started mentioning something that caused a lump in her throat and made tears roll down her plump cheeks. I gave a questioning look to my friend to make sure that he was also listening to the same horrific story that I understood with my nascent Spanish. When she stopped to breathe, he translated it to me in English to make sure I understood well. 

My host mother’s boyfriend was tortured during the Chilean dictatorship, and he fled the country, leaving her and their newly born daughter under her solitary care when she was not even twenty. I gaped at her and, at a loss of words about the dictatorship, I asked her about her parents.

Wiping her tears, she told me that her mother died soon after my host mother had given birth, and within a week of her death, her father and brother threw her in the backyard, which only had a shabby room, along with her few-months-old girl.

Taking some moments to absorb what I had just been told, I looked around the kitchen with my welled-up eyes. A wooden fire raged inside the oven-cum-stove in front of us. A few pieces of marraqueta bread toasted over the stove’s iron surface. A cauldron of chicken and pea soup simmered on the gas stove next to the stove. Orange curtains with big birds on them shined on the right-side window. 

During the two months that I had been in her home, I thought that the house would always have been comfortable. But when she was left to live there, she said that she only had a washing machine in a makeshift room. Then she built it into a six-room house which always smelled of toasted bread and crackling fire, and cumbia played on the radio, while travelers from around the world came looking for her bed and breakfast. 

At the age of sixty, she ran a whole Airbnb sort of setup, alone, and on just word of mouth. On a Saturday morning, you would see her running down to the dock to get fresh sea algae and salmon so that she could cook the traditional Chiloe Marisco soup for her lodgers. If one of us caught a wretched cold, she made pitchers of lemon and honey water throughout the day and came running to us on a shout. She apologized if a Chilean teacher or a friend disrespected us. She enunciated Spanish words even if she had just woken up at six to send me to the bus station. She was the one explaining us how families is the most important in Chile’s culture.

I watched her face and felt as if I was looking at her for the first time. Earlier when I used to see her being generous with others, I had assumed that her kindness was of a reciprocative kind. But no, she had just decided to turn the wind around. (My host mother was a perfect example of why we are responsible for our self-growth.)

Even though her brother, who had watched her carrying her baby and running a business alone from the drawn curtains of the closed doors of his front portion of the house, didn’t help her, she opened her home to him when he needed it. Crossing herself, she said that if she gave food and shelter to others, she would receive much more, and the goodness will spread.

The challenges of life had softened her demeanor but had toughened her from inside.

At that moment I understood why she was surprised and pushed me relentlessly when I told her I could not take my students to the inter-state debate competition as the headteacher at my school hadn’t agreed. She had said, so what if he didn’t agree, talk to the principal, write to the program, ask the children to send a letter. But she never once said, maybe you can’t go, for she had practiced not giving up her whole life.

The people she loved the most had betrayed her, but that didn’t stop her from trusting her boarders. Like one big family, we freely roamed around in the house, baked bread with her, cooked Indian and British food for her, carried her wallet if she forgot it at home while going shopping at the supermarket, and spent Friday evenings drinking wine and welcoming the weekend together. I am also guilty of cuddling her in her bed before going to sleep, every night.

Making the mistake of becoming a mother at an early age hadn’t turned her into one of those people who forbid everyone from doing anything. If I came home late at night, she neither gave a judgmental look nor did she impose any rule, unlike many other host families of the English teaching program I was part of. That we should stay safe and enjoy life is all that is important, she said.

Her own family might have left her, but now travelers from around the world are part of her family. She calls them her sons and daughters. Some of them now stay with her in the form of pictures on her house walls, some visit her whenever they can, some call her to wish her birthday, some have left the most gracious notes in her thick testimonial registers of which she may run out soon, some are still sitting with her in her house, and some, like me, are thinking about her from the other end of the world and receiving her positive energy. 

She is one of a kind, my host mother.

Did you find my Chilean host mother’s story inspirational? Share your stories in comments.

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4 thoughts on “How My Chilean Host Mother Reciprocated to Cruelty With Kindness”

  1. You are a treasure trove of experience. Thank you. How do you find hosts in this foreign places? And is everything pre booked or you do it once you land there?

    Reply
  2. Hi – Your blog on your travels in South America are a host of genuine events and shows that you had really absorbed a lot of the culture there and connected deeply with the people – Also very brave of you to have travelled to all these distant places – My question is ( since I plan to go to Argentina for 2 months ) – should I simply get Multiple entry visa’s for Chile / Peru / Bolivia / Brazil / Uruguway before I travel from India – (I have a Multiple Entry US tourist Visa for 10 years ( Expiry April 2023 ) – to avoid any screw ups in these countries – With your experience – your advice would be valuable – regards Ravi –

    Reply
    • Hey Ravi, thanks for your kind comments. I think taking a multiple entry visa now would not be helpful as your dates would be all mixed up. lets say if you want to visit Chile in June and then again in July and you get the visa only for 30 days, how would you manage even on a multi-visit visa? You can get a Bolivia visa in Peru easily. See my Bolivia visa guide. You can enter Peru and Chile with a US visa. So I think you are covered for at least these 3 countries. Do a little bit of research on Brazil and Uruguay as well and prefer taking a visa in South America itself. Because taking a visa now as per for future dates is quiet tough. Unless you have a really concrete plan? Let me know what you do.

      Hope this helps. Thanks for stopping by.

      Reply

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